Miracles Asia Nyhetsflöde

Gifts for Someone in Recovery: Practical Items That Support Treatment Goals
When someone you care about is in treatment, it is natural to want to show support in a tangible way. A thoughtful gift can be a reminder that they are not alone, and research suggests it can help emotionally. Brain-imaging research shows that giving and receiving gifts can activate reward and pleasure pathways linked to motivation and positive mood. Psychologists also describe a “warm glow” effect, where gift-giving is connected to social connection and trust, which can matter when someone is doing hard internal work.
That said, the best gifts during treatment are not symbolic or intense.

How Family and Friends Can Help Someone Get Addiction Treatment
When someone you love is struggling with addiction or mental health challenges, knowing how to help can feel overwhelming. Many family members and friends reach out quietly, unsure of what to say, how to start the conversation, or how to guide someone toward treatment without causing distance or harm.
At Miracles Asia, many inquiries come from loved ones who are seeking help on behalf of someone else. This is common, and it matters. Support from family and friends is often the first step toward recovery.
Start With Understanding, Not Pressure
Addiction and mental health conditions affect the brain, emotions, and behavior.

Valentine’s Day Gifts For Someone In Recovery: Supportive Ideas (And What Not To Gift)
Valentine’s Day can be sweet, but gifting someone in recovery requires a little extra thought. The most meaningful gifts do one thing well: they support routine, comfort, and healthy coping without becoming controlling, overly personal, or accidentally triggering.
Support matters in recovery. The kind of love that helps most is quiet, steady, and compassionate. It is not about fixing someone or making recovery look a certain way. It is empathy without pressure, and care that respects boundaries. On Valentine’s Day, that often means choosing gifts that support stability and choice, rather than intensity or expectation.












